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  3. Prematurity, Sepsis & Birth Trauma
Course Content
Lesson 1: Introduction to Newborn Jaundice
• What is jaundice? • Normal vs. pathological jaundice • Why it matters for African families • 🌍 Real-life case vignette from Nigeria
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Lesson 2: Causes of Jaundice in African Babies
• Immature liver function • Blood type incompatibility (ABO, Rh) • G6PD deficiency & common African genetic factors • Prematurity, sepsis, and birth trauma
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Lesson 3: Signs & Symptoms to Watch Out For
• Yellowing of eyes, palms, skin • Poor feeding, fever, sleepiness • When jaundice starts and how long it lasts • 📥 Printable "Jaundice Home Monitoring Card"
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Lesson 4: Myths vs. Medical Truths
• Debunking common African beliefs: "Jaundice is from bad breastmilk" "She must have looked at the sun!" "Rub with herbs or charcoal water" • What science actually says
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Lesson 5: Diagnosis and Tests
• Bilirubin testing and why it matters • Skin testing vs. blood tests • Where to access reliable testing
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Lesson 6: Home Care & What to Avoid
• Safe sun exposure: timing, position, dangers • Breastfeeding guidance • Dangerous practices (herbs, delay in care, sugar water)
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Lesson 7: Medical Treatment Options
• What is phototherapy? • When blood transfusion is needed • Hospital referral process in Africa • 🌐 Links to verified jaundice treatment centres
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Lesson 8: When to Go to Hospital or Call a CHW
• Red flag symptoms • Who to contact • 📞 Emergency hotline list by region
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Lesson 9: Follow-Up and Long-Term Care
• Monitoring for brain damage (kernicterus) • How jaundice may affect feeding, hearing, learning • Ensuring child development support
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Lesson 10: African Community Stories & Case Studies
• Testimonies from mothers in Ghana, Kenya, Nigeria, Uganda • CHW experiences: Early detection saves lives • What worked in low-resource rural areas
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Understanding and Managing Newborn Jaundice: A Guide for African Mothers

🎯 Learning Focus

To understand how premature birth, neonatal infections (sepsis), and birth trauma increase the risk and severity of jaundice in newborns, especially in low-resource African settings.


👶🏽 1. Prematurity and Jaundice

🔍 What is prematurity?

A preterm baby is born before 37 weeks of pregnancy.

🚨 Why are preemies at higher risk for jaundice?

Reason Explanation
Immature liver Can’t process bilirubin efficiently
Lower red blood cell lifespan More rapid breakdown → more bilirubin
Feeding problems Less stooling → less bilirubin excreted
Weaker immune system Infections may worsen jaundice

📊 Fact: Nearly 80% of preterm infants develop jaundice, often within the first 24 hours.

🧠 Preemies need closer monitoring, especially if born at home or discharged early from health facilities.


🦠 2. Neonatal Sepsis and Jaundice

🔍 What is neonatal sepsis?

A serious infection in newborns—often from the umbilical cord, poor hygiene, or maternal infection.

⚠️ How it leads to jaundice:

  • Sepsis damages liver cells, reducing bilirubin clearance

  • Increases red blood cell destruction

  • Causes poor feeding, worsening bilirubin buildup

🧪 Signs of sepsis-related jaundice:

  • Jaundice within first 24 hours

  • Fever or low body temperature

  • Refusing to breastfeed, irritability, fast breathing

  • Pus or bad smell from the umbilical cord

📖 Reference:
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7202384/

👨🏿‍⚕️ CHWs and TBAs must refer urgently if jaundice + infection signs are seen together.


🩸 3. Birth Trauma and Jaundice

🔍 What is birth trauma?

Injuries during delivery such as:

  • Bruising

  • Cephalohematoma (bleeding under the scalp)

  • Vacuum/forceps injuries

⚠️ How it causes jaundice:

  • Broken blood vessels leak blood into tissues

  • Body breaks down this extra blood → produces more bilirubin

  • Baby’s immature liver may be overwhelmed

Signs to watch for:

  • Swollen or bruised head

  • Yellowing that starts very early

  • Baby seems unusually sleepy or irritable

📖 Study:
“Birth trauma-induced jaundice in Nigerian neonates”
https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/31710194/


📊 Summary Table – These High-Risk Causes

Cause Key Risk Factors Signs to Watch Danger Level
Prematurity <37 weeks, low birth weight Early jaundice, weak feeding High
Sepsis Fever, umbilical infection, poor hygiene Lethargy, poor suck, yellow skin + fever Very high
Birth Trauma Prolonged labor, vacuum use Bruising, scalp swelling, early jaundice High

📍 Case Example – Uganda

A baby girl born at 35 weeks in rural Mbale district began to turn yellow on Day 1.
Her umbilical cord was tied with a non-sterile string.
She had a low-grade fever and refused to suckle.
The TBA gave her glucose water, thinking it would “give her strength.”
By Day 3, she had seizures from kernicterus.
A referral came too late, and she developed cerebral palsy.

“I wish I had known early signs. I would have taken her to hospital on the first day.” – Her mother


🧭 What to Do as a CHW or Caregiver

✅ Immediate Actions:

  • Refer urgently if jaundice starts <24 hours after birth

  • Watch for fever, poor feeding, bruises

  • Educate families that early yellowing is not normal

🧰 Encourage:

  • Skilled birth attendance

  • Clean cord care

  • Early postnatal visits (within 48 hours)

  • Avoid glucose water or herbs—they delay real care


🔗 Useful Resources

  1. WHO Guidelines for Managing Sick Newborns
    https://www.who.int/publications/i/item/9789240063027

  2. Helping Babies Survive Toolkit – Prematurity & Jaundice
    https://www.helpingbabies.org/

  3. Clean Cord Care Training – UNICEF/CHAI Africa
    https://www.healthynewbornnetwork.org/resource/clean-cord-care-toolkit/


🧩 Mini Quiz – Prematurity, Sepsis & Trauma

Q1. Why are premature babies more likely to get jaundice?
A. They drink more milk
B. Their livers are still immature
C. They sleep more
D. They cry too much

Answer: B
Rationale: Preterm babies’ livers are underdeveloped and can’t process bilirubin well.


Q2. What infection-related symptom may occur with sepsis-related jaundice?
A. Swollen feet
B. Umbilical pus or fever
C. Laughing too much
D. Teething early

Answer: B
Rationale: Sepsis often presents with infection signs like fever, umbilical discharge.


Q3. What is a cephalohematoma?
A. A broken bone
B. A scalp swelling from birth injury
C. A sign of healthy birth
D. A new tooth

Answer: B
Rationale: Bleeding under the scalp from delivery trauma that increases bilirubin risk.


🧭 Reflection Prompt:

“Talk with a local TBA or CHW: What do they do when a baby is yellow at birth? Suggest early referral and share warning signs from this lesson.”

MamaTotoBot - Maternal & Child Health Assistant